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There once
was a boy named Gimmesome Roy. He was nothing like me or you.
'Cause laying back and getting high was all he cared to do.
As a kid, he sat in the cellar, sniffing airplane glue.
And then
he smoked bananas -- which was then the thing to do.
He tried
aspirin in Coca-Cola, breathed helium on the sly,
And his
life was just one endless search to find that perfect high.
But grass
just made him want to lay back and eat chocolate-chip pizza all night,
And the
great things he wrote while he was stoned looked like shit in the
morning light.
And speed
just made him rap all day, reds just laid him back,
And
Cocaine Rose was sweet to his nose, but the price nearly broke his back.
He tried
PCP and THC, but they didn't quite do the trick,
And
poppers nearly blew his heart and mushrooms made him sick.
Acid made
him see the light, but he couldn't remember it long.
And
hashish was just a little too weak, and smack was a lot too strong,
And
Quaaludes made him stumble, and booze just made him cry,
Till he
heard of a cat named Baba Fats who knew of the perfect high.
Now, Baba
Fats was a hermit cat who lived up in Nepal,
High on a
craggy mountaintop, up a sheer and icy wall.
"But
hell," says Roy, "I'm a healthy boy, and I'll crawl or climb or fly,
But I'll
find that guru who'll give me the clue as to what's the perfect high."
So out and
off goes Gimmesome Roy to the land that knows no time,
Up a trail
no man could conquer to a cliff no man could climb.
For
fourteen years he tries that cliff, then back down again he slides
Then sits
-- and cries -- and climbs again, pursuing the perfect high.
He's
grinding his teeth, he's coughing blood, he's aching and shaking and
weak,
As
starving and sore and bleeding and tore, he reaches the mountain peak.
And his
eyes blink red like a snow-blind wolf, and he snarls the snarl of a rat,
As there
in perfect repose and wearing no clothes -- sits the godlike Baba Fats.
"What's
happening, Fats?" says Roy with joy, "I've come to state my biz.
I hear
you're hip to the perfect trip. Please tell me what it is.
For you
can see," says Roy to he, "that I'm about to die,
So for my
last ride, Fats, how can I achieve the perfect high?"
"Well, dog
my cats!" says Baba Fats. "here's one more burnt-out soul,
Who's
looking for some alchemist to turn his trip to gold.
But you
won't find it in no dealer's stash, or on no druggist's shelf.
Son, if
you would seek the perfect high -- find it in yourself."
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"Why, you
jive motherfucker!" screamed Gimmesome Roy, "I've climbed through rain
and sleet,
I've lost
three fingers off my hands and four toes off my feet!
I've
braved the lair of the polar bear and tasted the maggot's kiss.
Now, you
tell me the high is in myself. What kind of shit is this?
My ears
'fore they froze off," says Roy, "had heard all kind of crap,
But I
didn't climb for fourteen years to listen to that sophomore rap.
And I
didn't crawl up here to hear that the high is on the natch,
So you
tell me where the real stuff is or I'll kill your guru ass!"
"Ok, OK,"
says Baba Fats, "you're forcing it out of me.
There is a
land beyond the sun that's known as Zaboli.
A wretched
land of stone and sand where snakes and buzzards scream,
And in
this devil's garden blooms the mystic Tzu-Tzu tree.
And every
ten years it blooms one flower as white as the Key West sky,
And he who
eats of the Tzu-Tzu flower will know the perfect high.
For the
rush comes on like a tidal wave and it hits like the blazing sun.
And the
high, it lasts a lifetime and the down don't ever come.
But the
Zaboli land is ruled by a giant who stands twelve cubits high.
With eyes
of red in his hundred heads, he waits for the passers-by.
And you
must slay the red-eyed giant, and swim the River of Slime,
Where the
mucous beasts, they wait to feast on those who journey by.
And if you
survive the giant and the beasts and swim that slimy sea,
There's a
blood-drinking witch who sharpens her teeth as she guards that Tzu-Tzu
tree."
"To hell
with your witches and giants," laughs Roy. "To hell with the beasts of
the sea.
As long as
the Tzu-Tzu flower blooms, some hope still blooms for me."
And with
tears of joy in his snow-blind eye, Roy hands the guru a five,
Then back
down the icy mountain he crawls, pursuing that perfect high.
"Well,
that is that," says Baba Fats, sitting back down on his stone,
Facing
another thousand years of talking to God alone.
"It seems,
Lord", says Fats, "it's always the same, old men or bright-eyed youth,
It's
always easier to sell them some shit than it is to give them the truth."


llustrations
by Brad Holland |